Live A Little: Have A Latte

This is a new series I am starting on this blog. It is called Live A Little, and it is not about how to save more by cutting expenses and living frugal. It is not about a debt snowflake or solo 401K rules. It is all about spending. Don’t you frown already! We spend money on something almost every day. Some of those expenses make us feel guilty because we think that we make frivolous and unjustified spending choices. I am here for you to say “Stop feeling guilty. Live a little. It is okay to spend.” Life is not all about money.

We have all heard about “the latte factor“: spending on small thoughtless purchases that add up to a humongous amount of money in the long-term. What it means for you and I is that the money we spend on coffee, cigarettes, candies and what not, fritter away our financial future. If you are thinking like this, then you are missing a major point:

The latte factor is not about how much money you are spending. It is about how much money you chose to keep.

Why I Spend On A Latte

I love my morning latte. I love the way it tastes: hot, steamy, bitter (I drink it strong with no sugar added). I love the way it makes me feel in the morning – awake.

It is not cheap. Let’s say I pay about $4 for a medium size. If I buy my latte once a week (I try to be good and do it once a week), I spend $208 a year. On coffee. A year. It is quite a frivolous choice in many people’s eyes.

What People Say

Horror! Why not to invest $208 you spend on your morning latte annually, and in 25 years you might have over 10,000 dollars in your retirement, assuming a 5% return? Take into account the compound interest and see for yourself how much money you, silly girl, are throwing away.

What I Say

Assuming you live long enough to make it to retirement, do you want to live your life for the next 15, 20 or 30 years hoping that when you retire you will finally splurge on all these lattes you were dreaming about for the last 15, 20, 30 years? Do you want to watch people passing by, lattes in hand, and try to suppress the sneaky thought that they don’t give a shit about their retirement, and maybe that’s why they look so happy sipping their damned lattes?

Go ahead, get yourself a latte. It does not mean that you are financially irresponsible, careless and a selfish spender. It means that you chose a balanced (please note that’s the key word here) approach to your life and your finances.

How to Spend Money on Your Morning (or afternoon) Coffee And Not Feel Guilty

Budget for it. I have an allowance that covers my lunches and my lattes. If I go over it, I stop spending (it is not easy but it works) and wait till the next allowance.

Or give yourself a gift card with an allotted monthly amount to be spent on coffee. It works as well as an allowance.

Support your local coffee shops and not big corporations. Local first!

Exercise moderation if not in the name of money and your financial future, than in the name of calories. Don’t go overboard with your lattes.

You made a personal choice, embrace it. Don’t let others shame you into feeling guilty.

Keep doing all the good, smart and responsible things you’ve been doing with your finances. It will make you feel good and you will forget about your lattes that presumably are robbing you of your retirement.

Seriously, 10,000 dollars extra in my retirement account will not make or break my retirement lifestyle.

Live a little. Have a latte.

Comments
(35)

Sure, who doesn’t have their vices? I could forego the whiskey and cigars, dump the savings in a Roth account, and my life would be the poorer for it. No more pleasant evening smokes on the back porch, boozily and agreeably solving the world’s problems with a couple of friends.

Nothing wrong in sending money on self improvement. If coffee makes you feel better and work better then that’s the way for you. I feel satisfied with my free office Bravia every morning too. Only difference it saves me that $208 per year

I love the title of this post! I spend a lot of money eating out, because I really, really enjoy doing that. But I enjoy it more now that I’ve cut back, which may seem strange. But I think the key part of the “latte factor” is the mindless spending; not the spending itself. I may have to write a post on this 🙂

I love this post! Most people get caught up in the small wins instead of going for big wins. If a latte makes you feel good. go for it! You have to have a little fun. I say drink all the latte’s you want as long as you focus on making it up with the big wins.

I love my Starbucks espresso w/vanilla over ice. I know exactly how much I spend each month and I budget for it. I’m not an excessive shopper, I don’t drool over Manolo shoes or Kate Spade (did I spell these right?) hand bags, so for $60 a month, I can splurge on a drink every morning. It’s my one little indulgence.

Good for you in finding small joys in spending your money! I was lucky enough to be born with a natural tendency towards being frugal, but I sometimes wish I could enjoy spending more. 🙂 Very interesting to come across your blog and find someone with a different mindset of my own — I’ll be sure to keep reading to balance out my occasional cheapness.

i think if if you enjoy drinking it, then you should live a little and enjoy the perks of living life. but if someone is addicted to it and needs to have it every couple hours, then there could be an argument for money saving opportunity there.

I like your emphasis on balance. Having a purposeful spending plan for the things that we deem important or worthy can give us the motivation to stick to the overall budget. It’s kinda like trying to diet by eating only celery. It may work for one day but then we sit down and eat a whole cake! If you have planned for the latte and it makes you happy, sip away….just let me join you occasionally!

I agree with you; the best way to enjoy the little things in life is to budget for them. Saying “if you invested that money instead” for everything you spend money on is not realistic because most people do feel the need to spend some money on non-essentials. The key is to do it in moderation and not break the budget.

This is the best! I HATE the latte factor theory. I buy lattes all the time! Yesterday I even had two! And know what? I’m still saving for retirement. I’m even kicking my student loan’s ass and investing in the stock market. I’ve managed to build up a good chunk of financial assets — all while enjoy grande Cinnamon Dolce lattes for Starbucks at least once per week.

I love the fact that you support your local coffee shop! We had a local one open up a few months ago, and about once a week or so, I stop by & pick up a coffee from them. It’s part of my ‘blow’ money & while I won’t keep them in business, I can send others their way.

I think it really depends. To me my nearly daily lattes (yes 4-5 times a week!) were not a treat anymore, it was just a bad habit I needed to break. I really don’t feel deprived at all. actually I am really happy I stopped buying them and save the money instead. But I wouldn’t do that with the things that truly makes me happy 🙂